White wrote a book about his exploits impersonating others in the mid-1990s, "Guilty As Charged."

According to an indictment filed Dec. 12, White most recently pretended to be an agent of the Central Intelligence Agency in April 2011. Under that pretense, he obtained personal information and documents from a friend of a female coworker at a Houston civil engineering firm, the indictment states.

White's coworker at the engineering firm filed a complaint with the FBI in December 2011, alleging that White was impersonating who she believed to be an FBI agent.

She told Houston police and FBI agents that White tried to recruit her in March 2011 to work for the FBI. She said she saw what she thought was FBI identification around his neck and that he showed her a wallet with a badge on it.

He told the coworker he was in "Special Ops" and performed missions for them, court records state.

That same month, he had the coworker fill out a SF-86 security clearance form on a computer. The form included her personal information, including family members' names, education, employment history, Social Security number, driver's license number and passport number.

A friend of the coworker told authorities that in April 2011, someone identified as Jonathan Alan Davenport tried to recruit her for a position with the CIA. She sent him copies of various personal documents, records state.

In 2003, White was convicted on three counts related to impersonating a military officer and sentenced to eight months in federal prison.

Court records from the previous case raised questions about his mental health, but authorities determined he was competent to stand trial.